He does, though, have an old problem – “I’m still single and looking for love.”

Having gone through an ugly divorce and custody fight in the 1990s, Dantzig was desperate in 2000, when he placed a $3,000 ad in New York magazine offering a $200,000 bounty for anyone who could find him a wife.

After a Page 1 story in The Post, he was inundated with offers from available women, but wound up turning to matchmakers for help.

Longtime love connector Spindel took him on, working with him on his approach and fixing him up with his type – upscale, professional Jewish women under the age of 45 and shorter than 5-foot-8.

But dates with 11 women went nowhere, and Dantzig filed suit.

Spindel said the experience was “devastating” and took a toll on her business. Potential clients still grill her about the suit, which was settled in 2006, she said.

She said she was floored by the Valentine’s e-mail, which was followed by a letter of public apology “for my ill-advised and frivolous lawsuit.”

“You were hardworking and relentless” and “one of the nicest people I have ever met,” he wrote. “I was involved in a lot of personal problems and stress from previous unsuccessful relationships which caused me to act belligerently and inappropriately toward you and our best interests.”

Spindel said that Dantzig “seems happy,” and that she’s willing to hear what he has to say – but she’s not making any promises.

“I can hook anybody up,” she said, “but he’s going to have to prove to me big time he’s not a complete lunatic anymore.”